Iraq Sunni leader urges Ramadan ceasefire, US talks
Saleh al-Mutlak, a secular nationalist who was involved in negotiating a draft constitution, said a coalition of Sunni political groups close to insurgents was ready to promote such a dialogue to end the bloodshed that has ravaged Iraq since 2003.
"I call on the U.S. forces and the resistance to cease fire at once out of respect for Ramadan," Mutlak said, adding that he was also urging the U.S. military to free thousands of mainly Sunni detainees held on suspicion of guerrilla activity.
"The fighting should stop," Mutlak, who represents the National Dialogue movement, told Reuters. "We have fought for two-and-a-half years and the problem is it doesn't work."
Though such talk may be welcomed by beleaguered U.S. troops, Washington has in the past insisted it will not negotiate with the rebels and insists that the once dominant Sunni minority cannot thwart majority rule by threats of violence.
Nor, Mutlak conceded, would any ceasefire involve foreign al Qaeda fighters who he said were intent on a Sunni Islamic state. [db: thus driving a wedge between the groups - not a bad thing]
Within a week or so, several groups would meet to formalize the proposal, he said, declining to name them; Sunni politics since the fall of Saddam Hussein have been marked by a fluid mix of secular and clerical groups, support for which, as they mostly boycotted the last election, is hard to gauge.
"Our political program is close to the resistance," Mutlak said. "The only difference is we don't carry guns...So if the Americans can reach an agreement with the Iraqi National Dialogue, that will be close to the resistance demands." Read more
db: ....and the voices [aka G.O.D] in Bush's head said "nay, thou shalt smite them all George, for that is your destiny" or something.
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